Publications by authors named "KK Teng"

Neurotrophins play critical roles in the survival, maintenance and death of neurons. In particular, proneurotrophins have been shown to mediate cell death following brain injury induced by status epilepticus (SE) in rats. Previous studies have shown that pilocarpine-induced seizures lead to increased levels of proNGF, which binds to the p75-sortilin receptor complex to elicit apoptosis.

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The precursor of the neurotrophin (NT) nerve growth factor (NGF) (proNGF) serves physiological functions distinct from its mature counterpart as it induces neuronal apoptosis through activation of a p75 NT receptor (p75(NTR) ) and Sortilin death-signalling complex. The NTs brain-derived nerve growth factor (BDNF) and NT3 provide essential trophic support to auditory neurons. Injury to the NT-secreting cells in the inner ear is followed by irreversible degeneration of spiral ganglion neurons with consequences such as impaired hearing or deafness.

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Neurotrophins are initially synthesized as larger precursors (proneurotrophins), which undergo proteolytic cleavage to yield mature forms. Although the functions of the mature neurotrophins have been well established during neural development and in the adult nervous system, roles for the proneurotrophins in developmental and injury-induced cell death, as well as in synaptic plasticity, have only recently been appreciated. Interestingly, both mature neurotrophins and proneurotrophins utilize dual-receptor complexes to mediate their actions.

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Nerve growth factor (NGF) is initially synthesized as a precursor, proNGF, that is cleaved to release its C-terminal mature form. Recent studies suggested that proNGF is not an inactive precursor but acts as a signaling ligand distinct from its mature counterpart. proNGF and mature NGF initiate opposing biological responses by utilizing both distinct and shared receptor components.

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Although mature neurotrophins are well described trophic factors that elicit retrograde survival signaling, the precursor forms of neurotrophins (i.e., proneurotrophins) can function as high-affinity apoptotic ligands for selected neural populations.

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Neurotrophins, such as nerve growth factor and brain-derived neurotrophic factor, activate Trk receptor tyrosine kinases through receptor dimerization at the cell surface followed by autophosphorylation and recruitment of intracellular signaling molecules. The intracellular pathways used by neurotrophins share many common protein substrates that are used by other receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), such as Shc, Grb2, FRS2, and phospholipase C-gamma. Here we describe a novel RTK mechanism that involves a 220-kilodalton membrane tetraspanning protein, ARMS/Kidins220, which is rapidly tyrosine phosphorylated in primary neurons after neurotrophin treatment.

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Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is best characterized for critical roles in neuronal survival, differentiation, and synaptic modulation mediated by the TrkB receptor tyrosine kinase. Developmentally regulated death signaling by BDNF has also been demonstrated via activation of p75NTR. Because recent studies suggest that proNGF, the precursor form of NGF, is more active than mature NGF in inducing apoptosis after binding to p75NTR and a coreceptor, sortilin, we asked whether the precursor of BDNF (proBDNF) is also a proapoptotic ligand in the nervous system.

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Neurotrophins exert many of their biological effects via the Trk receptor tyrosine kinases and require the regulated activation of distinct transcriptional and post-translational cellular events. Here we provide evidence for a novel signaling cascade from activated Trks to the transcription factor STAT5. Utilizing the STAT5 responsive element derived from the p21(WAF1/Cip1) promoter to modulate luciferase expression, neurotrophin-dependent activation of Trk A, B, and C was found to induce STAT5-mediated transcriptional response.

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Long-term memory is thought to be mediated by protein synthesis-dependent, late-phase long-term potentiation (L-LTP). Two secretory proteins, tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), have been implicated in this process, but their relationship is unclear. Here we report that tPA, by activating the extracellular protease plasmin, converts the precursor proBDNF to the mature BDNF (mBDNF), and that such conversion is critical for L-LTP expression in mouse hippocampus.

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A major question in cell biology is how molecular specificity is achieved by different growth factor receptors that activate apparently identical signaling events. For the neurotrophin family, a distinguishing feature is the ability to maintain a prolonged duration of signal transduction. However, the mechanisms by which neurotrophin receptors assemble such a sustained signaling complex are not understood.

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Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) plays a critical role in nervous system and cardiovascular development and function. Recently, a common single nucleotide polymorphism in the bdnf gene, resulting in a valine to methionine substitution in the prodomain (BDNF(Met)), has been shown to lead to memory impairment and susceptibility to neuropsychiatric disorders in humans heterozygous for the variant BDNF. When expressed by itself in hippocampal neurons, less BDNF(Met) is secreted in an activity-dependent manner.

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Sortilin (approximately 95 kDa) is a member of the recently discovered family of Vps10p-domain receptors, and is expressed in a variety of tissues, notably brain, spinal cord and muscle. It acts as a receptor for neurotensin, but predominates in regions of the nervous system that neither synthesize nor respond to this neuropeptide, suggesting that sortilin has additional roles. Sortilin is expressed during embryogenesis in areas where nerve growth factor (NGF) and its precursor, proNGF, have well-characterized effects.

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The neurotrophins, a class of four related growth factors, utilize a dual receptor system consisting of Trk receptor tyrosine kinases and the structurally unrelated p75(NTR) to modulate diverse and sometimes opposing biological actions. The identification of novel ligands for p75(NTR), unconventional mechanisms for Trk activation and unique signaling intermediates further underscores the complex nature of neurotrophin: receptor interactions, as well as their functions within and outside of the nervous systems. This review summarizes recent surprises of how ligand-receptor pairing may affect diverse developmental events, regulate response to injury and extend their influence on memory and learning.

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Neurotrophins are growth factors that promote cell survival, differentiation, and cell death. They are synthesized as proforms that can be cleaved intracellularly to release mature, secreted ligands. Although proneurotrophins have been considered inactive precursors, we show here that the proforms of nerve growth factor (NGF) and the proforms of brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) are secreted and cleaved extracellularly by the serine protease plasmin and by selective matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs).

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The Crk family of adaptor proteins participate in diverse signaling pathways that regulate growth factor-induced proliferation, anchorage-dependent DNA synthesis, and cytoskeletal reorganization, important for cell adhesion and motility. Using kidney epithelial 293T cells for transient co-transfection studies and the nerve growth factor (NGF)-responsive PC12 cell line as a model system for neuronal morphogenesis, we demonstrate that the non-receptor tyrosine kinase c-Abl is an intermediary for NGF-inducible c-Crk II phosphorylation on the negative regulatory Tyr(222). Transient expression of a c-Crk II Tyr(222) point mutant (c-Crk Y222F) in 293T cells induces hyperphosphorylation of paxillin on Tyr(31) and enhances complex formation between c-Crk Y222F and paxillin as well as c-Crk Y222F and c-Abl, suggesting that c-Crk II Tyr(222) phosphorylation induces both the dissociation of the Crk SH2 domain from paxillin and the Crk SH3 domain from c-Abl.

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p21(c-Ha-Ras) (Ras) can be activated by the guanine nucleotide exchange factor mSOS1 or by S-nitrosylation of cysteine 118 via nitric oxide (NO). To determine whether these two Ras-activating mechanisms modulate distinct biological effects, a NO-nonresponsive Ras mutant (Ras(C118S)) was stably expressed in the PC12 cells, a cell line that generates NO upon nerve growth factor treatment. We report here that Ras(C118S) functions indistinguishably from wild type Ras in activating and maintaining the mSOS1- and Raf-1-dependent mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade necessary for neuronal differentiation.

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In many tissues, progenitor cells permanently withdraw from the cell cycle prior to commitment towards a differentiated phenotype. In the oligodendrocyte lineage a counting mechanism has been proposed, linking the number of cell divisions to growth arrest and differentiation. A direct prediction of this model is that an increase in the number of cell divisions would result in a delayed onset of differentiation.

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We have previously shown that glial growth factor (GGF), a member of the neuregulin (NRG) family of growth factors, is a mitogen and survival factor for oligodendrocyte progenitors in cell culture and blocks their differentiation at the pro-oligodendrocyte stage (P. D. Canoll et al.

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Expression of the adaptor protein v-Crk in PC12 cells results in sustained activation of NGF signaling pathways and augmented neuritogenesis. However, the inhibitory effect of the v-Crk SH2 domain mutant on neurite elongation does not correlate with impaired Trk A dependent signaling events or gene induction. In contrast, immunofluorescence studies and Triton X-100 extraction experiments indicate that v-Crk co-localizes with the cytoskeletal protein paxillin in the actin cytoskeleton whereas the v-Crk SH2 mutant causes aberrant aggregration of actin filaments at the growth cones.

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Expression of the adaptor protein v-Crk in PC12 cells results in sustained activation of NGF signaling pathways and augmented neuritogenesis. However, the inhibitory effect of the v-Crk SH2 domain mutant on neurite elongation does not correlate with impaired Trk A dependent signaling events or gene induction. In contrast, immunofluorescence studies and Triton X-100 extraction experiments indicate that v-Crk co-localizes with the cytoskeletal protein paxillin in the actin cytoskeleton whereas the v-Crk SH2 mutant causes aberrant aggregration of actin filaments at the growth cones.

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Reactive free radicals have been implicated in mediating signal transduction by a variety of stimuli. We have investigated the role of p21ras in mediating free radical signaling. Our studies revealed that signaling by oxidative agents which modulate cellular redox status, such as H2O2, hemin, Hg2+, and nitric oxide was prevented in cells in which p21ras activity was blocked either through expression of a dominant negative mutant or by treating with a farnesyltransferase inhibitor, as assessed by NF-kappa B binding activity.

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Nerve growth factor (NGF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF) elicit contrasting actions on PC12 pheochromocytoma cells; NGF causes neuronal differentiation, and EGF induces proliferation. However, ectopic expression of the Src homology 2 (SH2) and SH3-containing oncogenic adaptor protein v-Crk in PC12 cells results in EGF-inducible neuronal differentiation (Hempstead, B. L.

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The specific intracellular signals initiated by nerve growth factor (NGF) that lead to neurite formation in PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells are as of yet unclear. Protein kinase C-delta (PKC delta) is translocated from the soluble to the particulate subcellular fraction during NGF-induced-neuritogenesis; however, this does not occur after treatment with the epidermal growth factor, which is mitogenic but does not induce neurite formation. PC12 cells also contain both Ca(2+)-sensitive and Ca(2+)-independent PKC enzymatic activities, and express mRNA and immunoreactive proteins corresponding to the PKC isoforms alpha, beta, delta, epsilon, and zeta.

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We have examined the effects of the protein kinase inhibitor KT5926 on NGF-promoted responses in PC12 and PC12-C41 cells (a subclone of the parental cell line). Our findings reveal that this compound specifically and reversibly prevents the NGF-induced outgrowth and regeneration of neurites. In addition, neurites of NGF-pretreated cells cease further elongation upon exposure to KT5926.

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To address the means by which diversity of neuronal morphology is generated, we have isolated and characterized naturally occurring variants of rat PC12 pheochromocytoma cells that exhibit altered neurite outgrowth properties in response to nerve growth factor (NGF). We describe here a PC12 cell sub-clone, designated PC12-clone 41 (PC12-C41), that displays significant increases in neurite abundance and stability when compared with the parental line. This difference does not appear to be due to an altered sensitivity or responsiveness to NGF or to a more rapid rate of neurite extension.

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